Dr Susan Loughlin - Geologist
- British Geological Survey
My name is Susan Loughlin and I'm a geologist at the British Geological
Survey in Edinburgh.
I worked at the Montserrat Volcano Observatory from May 1997 through till
1999. My job there was to help with the monitoring and to help with public
education and all the other work that's done at the Volcano Observatory.The
role of the Montserrat Volcano Observatory is to monitor the volcano and
recognise the hazards posed by it. They also communicate with the Civil
Officials who then decide on acceptable levels of risk and organise hazard
mitigation and organise evacuations if necessary.
The monitoring data that the Montserrat Volcano Observatory collect is used
for research, both at the MVO itself and also in universities and laboratories
world wide. The MVO began just in 1995 in response to the first phreatic
explosions at the volcano. It was staffed by scientists from the Caribbean,
from America and from Britain initially, and over the years scientists from
all over the world have been involved. The Soufrière Hills Volcano
first became active in 1995 following some seismic activity and the first
sign of activity were phreatic explosions and this caused the first evacuations
in the capital city, Plymouth. In the years following that there was a lava
dome that grew gradually and continuously at the top of the volcano, generating
pyroclastic flows that eventually spread in all directions around the volcano.
Unfortunately in June 1997 the volcano claimed it's first victims after
a pyroclastic flow rushed down the north side of the volcano and impacted
villages there. During August, September and October of 1997 there were
a series of explosions. These explosions generated ash clouds that travelled
thousands of feet up into the air and some of them affected air traffic.
At the end of 1997 was the largest event where a huge collapse wiped out
villages in the south west of the island and had a devastating effect on
the whole of the south west area. The lava dome stopped growing in March
1998 and everyone hoped that this was the end of the eruption. For 20 months
no new magma was extruded. However, in November 1999, a new lava dome began
to grow. This grew for several months and then on the 20th of March 2000
a large part of it collapsed. However, lava dome growth did not stop and
it's continuing right up until the present day.
Monitoring of the volcano takes place 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
We have seismic monitoring which measures vibrations in the earth. We have
deformation monitoring which measures movements of the earth. We also make
observations of the volcano and we monitor gas emissions.
Volcanologists forecast volcanic activity so they are very good at foreseeing
hazards and looking at the areas that are most likely to be affected. Predicting
an exact time and a place is very, very difficult, almost impossible. In
order to forecast activity, volcanologists must maintain continuous monitoring
of the volcano and must understand as much as possible about the volcano
and its past activity. |